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Debussy - Pelléas et Mélisande / M. Ewing · Le Roux · van Dam ·  Courtis · Ludwig · Wiener Phil. · Abbado
 
 

Debussy - Pelléas et Mélisande / M. Ewing · Le Roux · van Dam · Courtis · Ludwig · Wiener Phil. · Abbado [IMPORT]

Claude Debussy (Artist), Claudio Abbado (Artist), Maria Ewing (Artist), François Le Roux (Artist), Wiener Philharmoniker (Artist), José van Dam (Artist), Christa Ludwig (Artist), Patrizia Pace (Artist), Rudolf Mazzola (Artist)
4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (5 customer reviews) More about this product


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (November 10, 1992)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Dg Imports
  • ASIN: B000001GFU
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #145,820 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #30 in  Music > Opera & Vocal > Divas > Ludwig, Christa

Listen to Samples

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Disc: 1
1. Act 1. Scene 1. Je ne pourrai plus sortir de cette forête
2. Act 1. Scene 1. Pourquoi pleures-tu?
3. Act 1. Scene 1. Je suis perdu aussi
4. Act 1. Scene 2. Voici ce qu'il écrit à son frère Pelléas
5. Act 1. Scene 2. Qu'en dites-vous?
6. Act 1. Scene 2. Interlude
7. Act 1. Scene 3. Il fait sombre dans les jardins
8. Act 1. Scene 3. Hoé! Hisse Hoé!
9. Act 2. Scene 1. Vous ne savez pas où je vous ai menée?
10. Act 2. Scene 1. C'est au bord d'une fontaine
See all 19 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. Act 3. Scene 3. Interlude / Ah! Je respire enfin!
2. Act 3. Scene 3. Interlude
3. Act 3. Scene 4. Viens, nous allons nous asseoir ici, Yniold
4. Act 3. Scene 4. Qu'ils s'embrassent, petit père?
5. Act 4. Scene 1. Où vas-tu?
6. Act 4. Scene 2. Maintenant que le père de Pelléas est sauvé
7. Act 4. Scene 2. Pelléas part ce soir
8. Act 4. Scene 2. Ne mettez pas ainsi votre main à la gorge
9. Act 4. Scene 2. Interlude
10. Act 4. Scene 4. C'est le dernier soir
See all 19 tracks on this disc

On this CD:

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
On paper, this recording is not necessarily promising. Neither Claudio Abbado nor the Vienna Philharmonic is noted for Debussy, and the enigmatic sense of restraint required by the role of Mélisande would not seem right for the hyperdramatic Maria Ewing. Nonetheless, this is among the best modern recordings available. The mysterious story of two lovers with questionable pasts drawn to each other with equal parts telepathy and sexuality is interpreted by Abbado with great confidence and rhythmic animation. Ewing channels her dramatic sense into a performance of great intensity and specificity, but in keeping with the opera's dreamy atmosphere. Other singers are old hands at their roles, with François Le Roux as Pelléas and Jose van Dam as Golaud. And in a bit of luxurious casting, Christa Ludwig sings the brief role of Genevieve with the French language bringing out a softness in her voice that's welcome to anyone who has spent decades hearing her sing in German. --David Patrick Stearns

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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unexpected excellence, May 9, 2007
By Jeff D. Wolf (Abilene, TX) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Abbado has made many wonderful opera recordings over the years, but Debussy's is not the first that would come to mind as one he is well-suited for. And so it is a delightful surprise to hear such marvelous results, in all respects. Singers, orchestra, and recording engineers join with the conductor in producing as close as we're ever likely to get to a fully rendered balance of this complex opera's diverse elements.

As a longtime fan of Christa Ludwig's, I find it an extra bonus to hear her sounding so gorgeous in French.

DG's entire production is done so well that this should be on everybody's Top Ten list of required opera listening.
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19 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Really good, but..., December 14, 1999
By A Customer
If Boulez's laserdisc account (DG) didn't exist, I would probably say that Abbado's is the best account that I've heard. It is certainly very, very good -- lots of atmosphere and passion, and absolutely gorgeous playing from the Vienna Philharmonic. However, there are a lot of things Abbado does that does not necessarily benefit the music -- the syncopated chords (depicting the dying Melisande's faltering breath) in the beginning of Act V are smoothed over so that one hears them only as long sustained chords. A lot of orchestrational detail is lost in Abbado's generally "fat" conducting. And the recording has a little bit too much reverb (which doesn't help the already not-too-clear performance). The cast is quite divine -- Le Roux is a little bit too nasal sounding to me, but I quickly got used to him. Ewing's tone is just a tad bit too rich for my taste. I prefer Boulez's cast -- he has a more pure-toned Melisande (Alison Hagley) and a better characterized Pelleas (Neill Archer). And, of course, Boulez's clarity is the very opposite of Abbado's murk. Alas, I believe Boulez's performance (the one on laserdisc) is out of print. I don't like Boulez's first version (Sony) -- it's not as clear, and the cast is not at all good. If you really want a Pelleas now, you could do worse than purchasing this set (Karajan's recording is even more fat than this, and is to be avoided!). I hope DG decides to re-release Boulez's recording on CD. I love this opera a lot, but I must say that, despite Abbado's fine performance, I would still not purchase this set simply because I know that there are too many things in this incomparable score that Abbado misses.
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11 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TOO DEEP FOR TEARS, May 4, 2006
By DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Debussy's great Pelleas et Melisande is not really a music-drama, much less an opera, in any familiar sense. It is more a book sung rather than read. The text is prose - quite simple prose at that - and so far as I know it is lifted straight from Maeterlinck's play. The music is as continuous as Wagner without relying on Wagner's special device of Leitmotiv, sc musical phrases with specific associations. The vocal idiom is a kind of constant recitative, and it is innocent of anything we would normally call melody from start to finish. That, on my view of the work, is how it must be - when singing a prose text tunes would be out of place. Again, I can think of no opera or music-drama that makes its effect so completely in sound alone, indeed that is how I prefer it. There may be no tunes, but there is infinite `atmosphere' to this music. It does not even `illustrate' its text, it fuses with it to form a single indivisible unity. It is toweringly great music in my opinion, but it has no existence apart from the narrative of which it has become a part.

Maeterlinck belongs to the school of French writers normally called `symbolist', and indeed there is symbolism enough in his story to keep the literary criticism industry going for centuries. The story captured the attention of other great composers too. It drew from Sibelius some attractive but lightweight incidental music, and Schoenberg was moved, alas, to depict it in a tone-poem of excruciating length and turgidity. Debussy was born, it seems, to give this deep and disturbing story its true and worthy musical representation. It is a depthlessly sad story, but on one level it is a very realistic one. The behaviour of Golaud and Pelleas is very recognisable indeed, and if the old king Arkel is as much a kind of Greek chorus in his comments as a kind of Nestor, the child Yniold is a very familiar type of French child. Melisande herself is the figure of mystery and contradictions. We never even find out where she came from - she was found crying in a forest like Coleridge's Geraldine, the victim apparently of unspecified wrongs done by unnamed wrongdoers. She is not a witch like Geraldine, but she precipitates the tragedy and she is a liar. She lies to Pelleas about the behaviour of Golaud when he found her (he was an impeccable gentleman), she lies to Golaud about the loss of her wedding-ring, and when she tells Pelleas that she only lies to Golaud that is itself a lie. However not only Golaud but Arkel too think of her as childlike, and indeed the developing passion in her relationship with Pelleas seems to come mainly from his side. Her death itself may have been the result of giving birth, although nobody suggests that, rather than a tragic event like the death of Desdemona. This is not a Shakespearean tragedy in any way, nor even a Greek-style one. The frequent references to fate are something else entirely here - this is just what can happen to people in certain situations.

Such is the power of the music that I prefer it all without stage action. Debussy creates a world of his own, and the performers here rise to it superbly. The trumpets surely sounded on the other side for Abbado and the Vienna Philharmonic for their superb realisation of this wonderful score, steering clear of hyperbole but without artificial coldness or restraint either. The singers seem to me without exception excellent. I am not myself a singer in any meaningful sense of the word, but I would guess that in technical terms Debussy's vocal writing is much less difficult than Wagner's to say nothing of Verdi's. Be that as it may, it calls for artistry and sensitivity of an exceptional order, and I hope I never have to revise my early impression that it is all something near flawless. The recording, from 1991, is just right to my ears too, and even the liner notes are outstandingly good. Maeterlinck's French is very simple, and I only glanced at the translation now and again. So far as I noticed, it was generally good, except that I spotted one howler - `le pont' on a ship is not the bridge but the deck. Would a sailing-ship have a bridge anyway? I also thought it rather a pity to downgrade Maeterlinck's vivid and memorable `l'haleine de la mort' to the dull and conventional `the shadow of death'.

How much general appeal this great work will ever have is something I have no means of knowing. I have not even attempted in a short review to touch on the matter of the symbolism that lies at its heart. If you are new to it, all I would say is that to have any hope of understanding it you must follow the text with undeviating attention, and it is in no way difficult to follow. It is not a thing to tug at your heart-strings in an ordinary sense, but it is as deep as the fountain in the park or the pools in the cave, and after hearing an account as fine as this one is it should take you some time to become the person you were before, if indeed you ever do.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars dense and luxurious chromatic music
Perhaps Abbado may have deliberately sped the tempo to fit 'Pelléas et Mélisande' onto two CDs, but it sounds alright to me this way, slightly stirred. Read more
Published on May 30, 2006 by Gregory Bittar

5.0 out of 5 stars Delicious!
What else needs to be said? Maria Ewing is amazing, sexy, sensual,Le Roux is also youthful, vibrant, and Abbado is at his best!
Published on September 3, 1999

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